What Goes With Paella?

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What goes with paella or what to serve with paella is something to take into account when you look for the full paella experience.

Despite the fact paella it’s definitely a complete dish by itself, that doesn’t mean that you can’t pair it with other side dishes. And that’s it when you are making paella for someone else mainly for guests.

However, Paella does stand on its own and I wouldn’t introduce many different flavors. Thus, we know this very well in Spain, and we combine paella and tapas. As you might know, tapas are served before the main side.

I like paella so much that I prefer not to eat tapas or starters so I can have more room for paella.

Inthis article, you will learn what is served with paella, either food, and wine.

What is Traditionally Served With Paella?

what starter can I serve with paella?

As I said before, paella is traditionally served with tapas, as appetizers or starters. We know tapas are basic for a proper paella with family, friends or even work colleagues. Then, we choose carefully what is served with paella so the whole meal is perfect and not too heavy.

Light Salad

Gazpacho Andaluz

Gazpacho is a typical Spanish dish, originally from the south of Spain. Gazpacho Andaluz is a cold soup, or more appropriately a whipped salad, with ingredients such as olive oil, vinegar, water and other additives such as almonds or raw fresh vegetables, usually tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, onions, and garlic.

Gazpacho andaluz

It is usually served fresh in the hot summer months, but it is always a great starter for paella because is light, tasty and full of vitamins.

Once all these ingredients are mixed in a recipient, just grind and blend well with the mixer and leave to cool in the refrigerator until serving time.

In addition, you can finely chop fresh vegetables on top before serving.

Never something this healthy was so delicious

This salad and/or gazpacho will be accompanied by not too filling tapas.

What is Tapas?

what to serve with paella? Paella Starters

Tapas is a classic of Spanish gastronomy that nowadays has reached the whole globe. They are small portions of food to accompany a drink (wine, beer or cider are the most common). They were born as slices of ham or cheese but today you can find small works of culinary art under the name “tapa” in the menu.

In the words of Miguel de Cervantes, tapas were a kind of alarm clock to thirst and the desire to drink wine or any other drink. Besides, tapas are defined by the Real Academia Española as a “small portion of some food that is served as an accompaniment to a drink“.

Just as the definitions and versions of the term are varied, so are the stories of the origin of the famous “Spanish tapas“. One of the theories assures that they are born with a well-defined objective: to prevent the wine from rising too quickly to the head of the diners and ending up with a good drunkenness.

King Alfonso X “El Sabio” was the one who regulated that in Castilian mesons it was forbidden to serve wine without accompanying it with some portion of food: slices of ham, chorizo or cheese, generally.

Which Tapas to Serve with Paella?

Easy Snacks

Chips or crips and salted fried peanuts, pistachios, almonds… are usually present on the table while waiting for paella.

appetizers for paella

Olives

Olives are, very much in their essence, an important and recognized part of the Mediterranean diet. Whether as a central element of the dish or as an essential decorative complement to it, the presence of this fruit in an immense variety of recipes is as undeniable as it is necessary, and certainly not by chance.

Who in Spain hasn’t ever had the classic bowl of olives accompanied by a delicious cold beer?

Due to its great variety and the intense and pleasant taste of this small fruit pillar of the Mediterranean diet, tapas with olives is a real delicatessen and have become one of the most popular snacks in restaurants and tapas bars nationwide.

Grilled cuttlefish

Grilled cuttlefish with garlic and parsley is a well-known dish in Spanish cuisine, usually prepared in this way and presented in small portions to share dressed with oil and smashed garlic, and parsley.

The recipe for grilled cuttlefish is extremely easy to make. The result is a light dish, rich and ready in five minutes; to share with friends along with a good cold beer while waiting for the paella.

Croquettes

Croquettes are simply a breadcrumbed and fried roll of food leftovers (usually), normally bound with bechamel sauce or mashed potatoes. Good croquettes are crunchy on the surface and soft and melting on the inside.

Although they may not sound like a gourmet invention, when made well, they are delicious.

You can find a wide range of croquettes in Spain specializes in croquettes, a culinary tradition stemming from its frugal past. The most popular versions are:

Ham Croquettes (Serrano)

Cod Croquettes

Pulled Chicken Croquettes

Shrimp Croquettes

Mushroom Croquettes

Croquettes aren’t especially light, and they need a while to be made. However, either frozen or fresh, a couple of them per person is a great tapa.

Cheese

Spain is one of the countries with the most varieties of cheese in the world, along with France and Italy, but I don’t know why both French and Italians have much more fame and popularity. So: Long live the Spanish cheese! We love Spanish Cheeses!

In Spain, we can find sheep cheese, cow cheese, and goat cheese. Fresh, semi-cured or cured cheeses. Smoked cheeses, cheeses cured in wine, beer, paprika, or rosemary. There are more and more traditional producers who, in small cheese factories, make more personal and original creations.

Then, the tapa can be simply some pieces or slices of chosen cheese on a plate, to be eaten alone.

Serrano Ham

Serrano ham or Iberian Ham is a must on every table while the paella is being mad and the answer is easy: paella and ham have lived together for a very long time.

There are few foods that are more Spanish than ham. Spanish ham (jamón) is the one food that all Spaniards, by default of just being Spanish, have to like. Whenever I have heard a foreigner say they do not like jamón, the response of every single Spaniard has been, “But have you tried the good stuff?”

The two most important hams that distinguish themselves as wise and well-minded visitors are Serrano ham and Iberian ham. The difference between them is not their geographical origin. Instead, the label refers to the breed of pig used to make the ham. Although the name Jamón Serrano refers to its origin in the Sierra (mountains), it is used for all types of smoked ham from the normal (pink) pig breed. For the more exquisite Iberian ham, the rather rare species of black Iberian pig is needed. The purer the breed, the more expensive the ham.

As well as cheese, the tapa is very simple. Just offer it sliced on a plate, maybe accompanied by sliced bread or similar.

Prawns or Shrimps

Either it’s a seafood paella, paella Valenciana or meat paella prawns its a fantastic tapa. Maybe because Spain is a peninsula or perhaps because prawns and shrimps are delicious.

They can be served in very different ways, but here you have the common ones.

Boiled and salted

Grilled and dressed with salt and lemon

Fried with garlic and parsley

Battered (tails)

Padron Peppers

The Padrón peppers, some bite, and others don’t (saying), it is a variety of small green pepper, generally between 3 and 5 cm.The “funny” thing with them is you never know if they are spicy or not until you try them and then, it is too late.Surely this is due to the current forms of cultivation since the pepper generates its itch producing a compound that serves as a defense against external attacks, such as insects and each pepper generates it differently.

They are usually served after frying and adding plenty of salt on top. This is a simple recipe, which will serve you as a good starter.

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